The invention concerns an induction system for heating, re-heating and keeping warm a food container combining an armature beneath the container, an induction device supporting the container optimised for the safety of the user, the electromagnetic compatibility, and preserving the induction device since the induction is activated only in the presence of an appropriate armature.
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1. A system including an induction device and an armature, comprising:
the armature being made of a conductive material or a conductive and ferromagnetic material, located in, on or under the bottom of a food container for heating food in the container, reheating the food or keeping the food warm, an inductor and an induction group generator circuit optimized for the safety of the user and the user's electronic devices and property, preservation of the electromagnetic environment, preservation of an induction source and an induction generator, wherein,
the inductor has an induction receiver detector which detects the presence of said armature, which controls the induction generator, the generator being connected to actuate induction only in the presence of said armature on the inductor, a conductor and/or ferromagnetic plate on the inductor which does not actuate induction, and the induction generator being configured to emit no radiation or induction in the absence of said armature.
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This invention describes an armature for induction heating of a food container such as a plate or dish, saucepan, bowl, glass or bottle.
The armature is located in, on or under the bottom of said container.
The armature is deposited, engraved, cut out and then glued, integrated, machined, or stamped, on, under or in the bottom of the container. The armature can also be part of the structure of the container (saucepan or specific pastry boat). It can also be chemically, physically, mechanically or thermally treated in a selective manner.
More specifically, the invention describes an armature intended for heating in the presence of a specific inductor, having characteristics which improve user safety, protection of the inductor from power surges, and electromagnetic compatibility (so-called EMC) of heating. Certain aspects of the specific inductor contribute to the invention.
Zones of potential application for induction heating and cooking are especially sensitive to EMC, in particular hospitals, which have a great deal of electronic instrumentation, aircraft, nursing homes, trains and boats. Absolute respect for the EMC restriction is the condition for development of inductive heating in these markets.
Induction-heated plates are described in Patent Application FR 9614475 and Utility Model Application FR 9706059 by the same inventor, and inductor examples are also described. This invention can be adapted to inductors and armatures described in these documents, and reference will be made in the description to inductor and armature diagrams.
Protection of the inductor, which is located in a base of the container, such as a tray, place mats, or an induction plate, requires that the container having an armature have an impedance that conforms to the standard.
If an armature is too conductive, it risks short-circuiting the inductor and producing a power surge of heat detrimental to its service life.
An armature which is too resistant will produce too little heat.
The heating power is controlled by the user, with effective powers varying within a wide range. It is therefore important that measurement of instantaneous power not be the only factor taken into account by the inductor in triggering its safe mode.
Protection of the consumer means that the inductor cannot induce current anywhere other than the containers intended for this purpose. This also contributes to preservation of the power source of the induction system, and the inductor tray or placements can be used without fear that the presence of a metallic ground will trigger induction.
Thus, the inductor does not react to the presence of place settings, saucepans, bracelets, watches, and other things, such as mobile phones.
Electromagnetic compatibility requires that the inductor not emit into the environment an electromagnetic field capable of disturbing any electronic devices.
Electromagnetic compatibility is optimized by the following inductor characteristics:
Confinement of the magnetic field, low frequency of the electromagnetic field, low rate of harmonics, actuation of induction exclusively in the presence of the armature absorbing the radiation, strong coupling between the armature and the inductor.
According to the invention, the inductor is a flat circuit comprising two coils 1 and 2 as shown by the embodiment in FIG. 1.
We would like to point out the opposite directions of the coils, and magnetic field B which crosses the two coils.
One preferred but not exclusive embodiment is described in an embodiment of FIG. 1. On a thin double-sided circuit 3, two conductor strips 1 and 2 are engraved (black line), coiled in two spirals heading in opposite directions. On the lower face, a conductor strip 4 closes the circuit by connecting the two centers of the spirals. Alternating induced magnetic field B emerges from one of the coils and converges toward the second one. It is confined by the structure of the inductor. Voltage source 5 generates induction currents.
A second type of inductor shown in
In this embodiment, the inductor does not generate a free magnetic field under the circuit, and almost the entire field is trapped. Thus, only the upper face generates the induction. This second inductor circuit is especially optimized to meet electromagnetic compatibility restrictions for the protection of the consumer and his electronic instruments.
The circular-shaped inductor circuit is intended to induce layer currents in a disc-shaped armature of the same diameter.
This geometry describes that of the currents of any uniformly conductive armature situated opposite to the inductor.
In particular, such currents will travel around a metallic dish, a saucepan, or an aluminum pastry boat.
In order to differentiate such induction receivers from standard armatures, induction should only be actuated in the presence of induced currents having the described geometry.
Thus, the standard armatures are armatures through which a geometry of currents different from the preceding one travels. They therefore have a detectable difference, and this difference remains regardless of the relative angle of orientation between the armature and the inductor.
The armature shown in
It has a collection space in the center of a diameter roughly a tenth the diameter of the armature disc. The conductive or ferromagnetic material is drawn into this disc.
This is a non-restrictive embodiment of an armature suitable for a particular distribution of current.
Simple engraving of an insulating ring with a diameter roughly a tenth of the diameter of the armature is also suitable.
Engraving of any pattern with a perimeter roughly a tenth of the diameter of the armature is also suitable.
Engraving of a mark, a logo, or a pattern in the deposited material, in negative or positive, inscribed in an engraved disc, is also suitable.
The armature shown in
The armature of
Here, too, the following engravings or resists are suitable: a resist disc, an engraved ring, a logo or a mark in negative or in positive, inscribed into a disc, a pattern in positive or negative, each one of these having a perimeter with a diameter roughly a tenth of the diameter of the armature.
As mentioned in Patent Applications 9614475 and 9706059, the armature is made of a conductive and diamagnetic material, or even a ferromagnetic and conductive material:
in the first case, the magnetic field extends from the armature;
in the second case, the magnetic field is confined within the armature.
Confinement of the magnetic field is total, with association of an inductor of the type shown in FIG. 2 and an armature of the type shown in
Thus, this ensures an almost total electromagnetic compatibility.
Confinement of the field is partial between an inductor of the type shown in FIG. 1 and an armature of the type shown in
Confinement of the field is purely geometric between an inductor of the type shown in FIG. 1 and conductive armatures like those shown in
One of the means for optimizing the EMC consists in only emitting induction in the presence of a standard armature that is properly coupled and that absorbs radiation, and emitting nothing otherwise.
For a uniform armature, the induced currents are the reverse reflection of currents through which the inductor travels. If the currents encounter an obstacle, however, they circumvent it the shortest way possible. The central engraved zone or resist zone is an obstacle for the induced uniform current.
These currents are similar to those of
It is this feature which makes a standard armature different from a plate.
Consequently, specific currents in the presence of a standard armature are the vertical difference between the currents of FIG. 3 and those of FIG. 6.
There can be observed a distribution which is highly characteristic of current in the presence of an armature having a central pattern.
A standard armature, i.e., one which has a central pattern, will therefore be detected by associating the inductor with a circuit which is sensitive to induction generated by a distribution of current such as the one shown in
These receivers are insensitive to inductions of type 7b and 7c, a condition necessary for discrimination to be perfect.
Consequently:
An inductor of the type of
Armatures of the
Uniform plates do not couple current in receivers of type 8a and 8b.
Inductors of type 1 or 2 do not couple current in receivers of type 8a or 8b.
This type of discriminated operation is perfectly suitable for ensuring the safety of individuals and electronic devices, and it is also suitable for improving the compatibility of inductors and armatures, even without confinement of the magnetic field.
in the absence of the standard armature;
in the presence of a non-standard metal plate and which spontaneously actuates in the presence of the standard armature.
This circuit is especially remarkable and original in that it detects the presence of an armature without emitting any signal or any current or any magnetic field.
It is only in the presence of the standard armature that the circuit actuates induction.
It would be impossible to disturb the electromagnetic environment any less than having nothing emitted.
There is no better way to ensure safety than having any induction be conditioned on the presence of the absorbing standard armature.
This also has the advantage that it preserves the power source of the inductor.
Finally, with perfect coupling between the inductor and the armature, or even with the choice of an inductor of the
The electronics in
TX1 and L3 represent the inductor.
R1 represents the input load resistance of the amplifier.
C2 represents a phase compensating capacitor.
TX2 and L2 represent the induction receiver.
TX1 L4 and R2 represent inductance or the secondary of any armature.
TX2 and L5 represent the inductance and the source of a standard inductor.
An amplifier A insulates an input loop and an output loop. The entire thing forms the inductor circuit linked to the induction detection sensor.
The output loop has a capacitor C1, residual inductance L3 and the primary of a transformer TX1 that is grounded.
The input loop has a grounded resistance R1 which represents the input impedance of amplifier A, a capacitor C2, residual inductance L2 and the secondary of a transformer TX2.
An armature has two loops:
The first connects the secondary of transformer TX1, its residual inductance L4 and a resistance R2, it being understood that the secondary and L4 are intrinsically resistant.
The second loop contains the primary of transformer TX2, its residual inductance L5 and resistance R2.
The inductor is represented by L3 and the primary of TX1.
The induction detection means sensor is represented by L2 and the secondary of TX2.
The heating part of the armature is represented by first loop L4, secondary of TX1 and R2.
The detected part of the armature is represented by L5 and the primary of TX2.
A standard plate contains the detected part of the armature represented by L5 and the primary of TX2 and the heating part of the armature represented by first loop L4, secondary of TX1 and R2.
A non-conforming plate or a metallic plate of any kind have only first loop L4, secondary of TX1 and R2.
Only the standard plate loops the output of amplifier A back towards its input and creates a reaction that immediately causes spontaneous oscillation.
The diagram is clearly that of a spontaneous oscillator from the moment there is coupling between the output and input.
In the absence of an armature, the coupling between the two primaries of transformers TX1 and TX2 is zero: there is no reaction, no induction, since the amplifier has not been controlled.
In the presence of a non-standard armature, TX2, L5 are absent, and there is therefore no induction reaction.
In the presence of a standard armature, there is coupling between by TX1, then by TX2, and therefore a reaction between the output and the input of the amplifier. A spontaneous oscillation appears and maintains itself, and induction is actuated.
Only the coupling with a standard armature and exclusively a standard armature will actuate induction.
The process that combines an inductor according to
It protects the user and his electronic devices, preserves his electromagnetic environment and the power source of the inductor.
The framework of the invention also extends to a central zone of the armature whose conductivity is less, in such a way that the layer currents are turned back from this zone, whose radius is approximately a tenth of that of the armature.
A simple perimeter of the less conductive zone helps perform this function.
A partial engraving of the perimeter or of the zone is suitable as is a conductive or ferromagnetic deposit with a lesser thickness.
A cut-out in a conductive and/or ferromagnetic disc is also suitable. The armature is deposited, engraved, cut out and then glued, integrated, machined, or stamped, on, under or in the bottom of the container. The armature can also be part of the structure of the container (saucepan or specific pastry boat). It can also be chemically, physically, mechanically or thermally treated in a selective manner.
All these processes can be used to create a central pattern.
The aforementioned diameter which is a tenth of the diameter of the inductor is given by way of indication.
A diameter of the central zone between one-third and one-twentieth that of the armature is also suitable.
A variant of the invention consists in creating a pattern whose conductivity is not less but greater, and which therefore does not turn back the currents, but rather confines them.
The current layer is then deformed in a likewise characteristic way; it will therefore be recognized and detected by a specific induction receiver.
According to the invention, a central zone of the less resistant armature, with a diameter roughly a third to a twentieth of that of the diameter of the armature, produces a deformation of the layer currents similar to that shown in
In addition to the aforementioned processes, gluing of the pattern, fastening, additional deposition, or brazing will increase a pattern's conduction.
a pattern of this type in the central zone is also indicated for a circular container.
The invention can still be used in all of these versions for a non-circular food container, in connection with a non-circular armature, for which the pattern will not need to be central.
In fact, a non-circular armature could be linked to a non-circular inductor and therefore the angle of orientation of the armature on the inductor will be fixed, and the pattern will not be restricted to having a central symmetry and geometry.
Finally, the circuit shown in
This diagram is not restrictive, and any circuit whose generation of induction is conditioned on detection of the signal emitted by the discriminating receiver is suitable.
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